Village record. (Waynesboro', Pa.) 1863-1871, May 14, 1869, Image 1

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Sy W. Xtllstiv.
VOLUME XXII.
ALEX LEE D, S.
Next door to tho Town Hall, has n3w on hand
fine assortmont of
CLOCKS,
Seivied by himself with -- grent" care, a large and
well selected assortment ot,
utaiirdaa - a,
of Swiss, English, and American Manufacture ;
J EWE L RY
cheaper than ever before sold in Waynesboro', ail
the latest styles kept constantly on hand.
Every variety of Cull buttons.. A fine assbrt
merit of
FINGER AND EAR RINGS
Solid Gold. Engagement arid
WEDDING RINGS,
Silver Thimbles and Castors, Forks, and
spoons, gait Cellars, and Butter K nives of the cel
ebrated Roger Manufacture, at reduced rates;
SPECTAC,LE
-.1
To suit everybody's eves. New glasses put in old
frx mes.
elorks,. Watches, and Jewelry promptly and
neatly repaired and warranted.
ALEX. LEEDS,
Next door to the Town Rail, under the Photograph
Gallery. July 31.
LI. I BMEDELIIKE
DEALER IN
DauGs,
Chemicals,
PATENT MEDICINES,
PREPARATIONS FOR THE HAIR,
OILS,!PAINTS,
VAANISILESES,
arc. &e.
--- 0----.-
6::rPhysicians dealt with
at 20 per cent. discount.
Waynesboro' Hotel Building,
Mara). 27, 18Ge.
-t)_,_,
1111!'
WAYNESITORO',y,‘
WAYNESBORO', FRANKLIN COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, FRIDAY MORNING
x3c3amisr.xciALzi.
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[For the Record
TO ELLA, IN BEAM
BY MURRAY.
M 2 ny—years-ago,-in-my- sehood z d ays,_there_lived_
in Waynesboro' a widow —the Mother of a sweet lit
tle girl with golden hair. That little girl was my
clastmate. Hir sweet disposition, and lady-like
manners, gained for her, not only the love of the
teacher, but of all her schoolmates. From that
schoolroom I went out to batt'e with the world,
and I never saw her more ; for she soon after died,
and went to live with the at gels. In life's retro .
spect, there is no dearer remembrance that little El
la, now in Heaven.
Thou wilt be,the same forever;
The same sweet, guileless, child of beauty.
That thou-wert from e'en thy birth !
Though we are changing, ever changing,
n t is weary life on earth.
Tell me, loved one, o'er the river,
Where thou art cilled, to live forever ;
From that unseen abode of pleasure,—
Cart'a thou mark the sighs and tears--
The bitter cups, in all these years,
That we must drain for our measure.
Nay, kind Heaven! veil forever,
From her who dwells beyond .the river,
All the panes and cares of life ;
May the never see the woe—
he—endless-tail nod I eiwetes , . btrif ,
Of us poor mortals here below.
Then, when we meet beyond the river,
To live in bliss with her forever,
That bliss,.will know_of_no_alloy_.
The guileless heart th t scarce knew rain,
Will throb with never ending joy,
When linked with earthly ties aratn.
- - West Grove, Davis Co., lowa
A COUNTRY HO U.
Oh give me a home in the country wide,
And a seat by the farmer's wood fireside,
Where the fire burns bright -
On a frosty night -
Where the jest, the song, and the laugh are free,
Oh ! the grmees home is the place for me.
Oh! give me a home in the country wide,
Whire the earth comes out as a blushing bride
With her buds and flowers'
In the bright spring hours,
Her bridal song ringing from fresh leaved trees,
• nd melody floats on the perfumed breeae.
In a summer seat in a altatly nook.
And close by the side eta purling brook,
-Where the violet grows,
• Or the pale swamp rose, °
Fainting, sick, 'neath the sun's scorching beams,
Dips her petals in the cooling stream.
Oh ! give me a home in the country wide,
In the golden days of a farmer's pride,
When his barns are filled
From the fields he's tilled,
And he feels that his yearly task is done,
And smiling at winter, he beckons him on.
A FREAK OF FORTUNE
The Dubuque (Iowa) Tinzes, of March
25th, tells, the following :
'Three years'ago there resided in this city
a sun-burned, hard fisted, industrious man,
earned Adolph Gull, who earned the food
required for the consumption of himself, wife
and family of seven children, by sawing
wood from door to door. But little wan
known of his early history beyond the fact
that be was an exile from Poland, Europe,
an item of information which he imparted
to one or two personal friends with the
further statement that he had relatives living
there who were very wealthy, and might
place him above want, if so disposed. Dur
ing the internal feuds and tyrannical govern
ment which gppressed that unhappy land,
he, with a number of others, determined to
emigrate and seek relief on the shores of
free America. After a safe and prosperous
voyage the party landed in Now York, from
which point Mr. Gull continued hit; journey
to the West until he came to Dubuque,
where he rented a cheap tenement on Wash
ington street, and settled down to the busi
ness we have before stated.
'How long Mr Gull would hare remained
in this city, following his humble employ
ment, and congregating with others of his
class on Seventh street, wo do not know,
had it not been for the liberality manifested
by Uncle Sam. In 1866, Mr. Gull's atten•
tion was turned ti) the homesteads offered
by the General Government to all actual
settlers in the western frontiers of our State.
After revolving the matter over, he resolved
to avail himself of the benefits of so humane
a provision, and ffioging his buck and saw
to one side, he packed up his household
goods, bade adieu to his comrades, and, with
his family, started for the fields of promise.
He was fortunate in procuring a good loca
tion within twelve miles of Fort Dodge, and
soon had'a nice little patch of ground under
the plow. Here he worked and toiled month
after month, and was gradu ally becoming in
dependent in circumstances, through his own
exertions, when all at once the fickle goddess
Fortune came to his relief, and made him a
millionaire
•
'On tho 14th inst., he was called to Fort
Dodge on business, and on inquiring at the
postdftec, found a letter directed to his ad•
Ar. IrLcloroe•i3clizimt 2Volocrisparpeer.
dress, from the old country, which. had evi- -
dently been awaiting hie order for some days.
Mr. Gull took it out, glanced at the super.
soription intently, and remarking that at last
some one of the folks had ooncluded to write
to him, opened the document and commenced
to read. He had not devoured more than
half a dozen lines before he uttered a loud
yell and commenced to dance around in a
manner absolutely inexplicable to the bystan.
dere, who thought that the wan had sudden
ly become insane. After the first surprise
was over, Mr. Gull became more rational, and
informed_the apectators_that_he_was_no_lonaer_
a poor plodding farmer, but a millionaire by
the' decease of an uncle in Poland, who had
willed to him his entire property, amounting
to five millions of dollars, which was now
awaiting , his disposal. All this and much
more the letter contained.
'To make a long story short, Mr Gull sold
his farm the nest week, and is now on his
way-to the old country, to take possession of
his property, having passed through Du
buque last Monday evening. We have only
;um ti =.l:=laium
find everything all right. But who would
have supposed that a Dubuque woodsawyer
could ever have turned out a-millionaire?
them of the unrighteousness of their cause;
and, if they still persist in sanguinary pur•
poses, Oh I let the voice of Thine own un
erring justice, sounding in their hearts, con
strain them to drop the weapons et war from
Everlasting equilibrium, or pay your way, their unnerved hands in the day of battle.
is a fundamental principle and an inexorable lie Thou present, 0 God of wisdom, and di
law of nature. If you do not pay, then rect the councils of this honorable assembly.
nature takes pay. The account must be and Enable them to settle things on the best and
is kept square; and nature never makes a surest foundation, that the scenes of blood
mistake—is never deceived. . Nor is there may be speedily closed, and order, harmony,
any use in trying to. elude he decrees, or to and peace may be effectually restored, and
escape her jurisdiction, or to evade her sheriff truth and justice, religion and piety prevail
when bhe issues execution. Her detectives and flourish amongst Thy people - . — Preserve
are born in our own bosoms and have access the health of their bodies and the vigor of
to the very recesses of our being. A. selfish their minds; shower down upon them and
man may surround himself with everything the millions they here represent such tern
-va-h-ich-he-most-oovet,s;_ho-inay-la-y-u-tylet-t. ' e , , ••
-, • I ~s- a s- T - I rou- s eest expedient-for
rite the vales of Cashmere, the looms of them in this world, and crown them with ev-
Persia, the spice fields of Arabia, and the eilasting glory in the world to come All
mines of Goloouda, and fence himself around this we ask, in the name and through the
with a wall .of gold; and yet the Nemesis of merits of Jesus_Christ, Thy Son, our_Savior.
vielit - , equilibriore, balance_s_hect Et_n_d_bil L _Amen-I'
dirt, P
in hand, will scale-that wall, and blast those
luxuries, and hurl all the plagues of Egypt
upon the delinquent. The water of his hope
shall be wined to the blood of disappoint
ment; the frogs of discontent shall croak in
all his chambers; the lice of secret evils shall
infest his whole being; the flies of censorious
ness shall sting him ; the murrain of in
dulgence shall consume him.; the boils of
shameless wickedness shall cover him: the
hail of perverted blessings shall smite him;
the locusts of malevolence shall devour him;
the thick darkness of prostituted faculties
shall envelope hitia; and over all shall be
heard his wail for the death of his first born
—of that in which he had most trusted for
happiness, on which he bad most cherishing
ly set his heart of hearts —Oliver Dyer in
Paclearci's Monthly for May.
No Use in that Country
A distinguished man lay on his death bed,
when a great mark of distinction and , honor
was brought to him. Turning a cold glance
on the treasure he would have clutched with_
an eager grasp. he said with a sigh, 'Alas
this is a mighty fine thing in this country,
but I am going to a country where it will be
of no use to me' Who can reflect, without
sadness, on the eloaing, moments of the gal
lant General Neil. His life-long dream had
been to obtain the little baton and ribbon of
Marshall of France. He could not sleep af
ter seeing it conferred on McMahon, as a re
ward of valor in the battle of Magenta. Be
fore the next engagement, he told his friends
that this time he would win the prize, ho so
much coveted. The conflict was over, and
they sought him anxiously upon the gory
field, They found him almost crushed be
neath his war-horse, and the practiced eye
of the surgeon told him that life would soon
be over. Word was sent to the Emperor,
who quickly arrived, and drawing from his
breast the badge of Marshall of France, he
placed it above the heart of his faithful Fol
lower. The life-long dream was realized, and
with a single throb of exultant joy and grat
itude, he threw his arms about the neck of
his sovereign—the next instant he fell back
in the embrace of a stronger King.
0, how can we struggle, and toil, and dis
tract our hearts from the one great purpose
of lifts, simply to gather about us possessions
which, though they may be very fine things
in this country, 'will be of no use to us in
the country we are so shortly going to.'
A 'MOMENT or Mout - MT.—Forty years
once seemed a long and weary pilgrini2, , e to
tread.' It now seems 'Jut a step, And yet
along the cagy are broken shrines, where a
thou-and hopes have wasted into ashes; foot
prints sacred under their drifting dust; gieen
mounds whose grass is fresh with the water
ing of tears; shadows even which we would
not forget. We will gardner the sunshine of
thoso years, and with chasteaed step and
heavenward hope puss on towards the even
ing whose signal lights will soon be seen
swinging where the waters ate still, and the
storms never beat.
The man that laughs is a doctor without
a dip'oma; hie face does more good in a sick
room than a bushel of powders or a gallon
of bitter draughts. People are always glad
to see him—their bands instinctively go half
way out to meet his grasp, while they turn
involuntarily from the clammy touch of the
dyspeptic who speaks en the groaning boy..
He laughs you out of your faults, while you
never dream of being offended with him and
you know not what a pleasant world you are
living in, until he points out the sunny
streaks on its pathway.
Oaths aro vulgar, senseless, offensive, im.
pious; like obscene words, they leave a loath
some trail upon the lips, and a stamp of
odium upon the soul. They are inexcusable;
they gratify no sense, while they outrage
taste and dignity.
The First Prayer in Congress
In Thatcher's Military Journal, under
date of December, 1777, is found a note con
taining the identical 'first prayer in Con
gress,' made by the Rev: Jacob Duebe, a
gentleman of great eloquence. Here it is—
an historical curiosity :
'O, Lord, our,beavenly Father, high and
mighty King of kings, and Lord of lords,
who dolt from Thy throne behold all the
dwellers of the earth, and reignest with pow
er supreme and uncontrolled over all the
Kingdoms, Empires, and Governments ! look
do wn-in-mercyr-we-beseeoh—TheeT on-these
American States, who have fled to Thee from
the rod of the oppressor, and thrown them
selves on Thy gracious protection, desiring
to be henceforth depehdent only : on Thee.—
To Thee they have appeared for the - right
cpuspess of their cause; to Thee do they
now look up for that countenance and sup
port which Thou alone canst give. Take
them, therefore, - heavenly father, - under Thy
nurturin: care. Give them wisdom in coup-
cil and valor in the field. Defeat the mali-
eaigos o
Sleeping Habits.
To be able to lie down at night and--fall
asleep within ten minutes, and to know no
dreams of wakin. , until the morning comes,
and then to bound out of bed full of health,
freshness and vigor, is a blessing worthy of
the warmest outgushirigs of a thankful heart
toward Him who giveth us all things richly
to enjoy.
Some of the ways of obtaining such a urioe
less boon we here Dame :
Take dinner at the good old fashioned hour
of mid day, eat nothing afterwards except
supper, when a piece of cold bread and but
ter with a single cup of weak tea and a half
glass of pure water is enough for anybody
under ordinary circumstances. If dinner is
taken in the middle of the afternoon, do not
cat an a torn of anything until morning An
other plan is to avoid sleeping during the
day, and retire habitually a a regular hour.
In order to make the desirable result more
certain, remember practically the following
facts :
We need ordinarily seven hours of sleep
in summer and eight hours in winter.
We breathe in . blecp about firteen times
every minute.
Each inhalation of pure air is returned
loaded with poison; a hundred and fifty
grains of it is added to the atmosphere of a
bed room every hour, or twelve hundred
grains during a night.
Unless the poison laden atmosphere is di
luted or removed by a constant current' of
fresh air passing through the room, the
blood soon becomes impure, then circulates
sluggishly, accumulating and pressing on the
brain, gives rise to frightful dreams. If the
room is small and tight, the spectral night
mare, the fearful groan, the terrible shriek,
are the result, and in aggravated cases, with
the addition of a hearty late meal, there is
not strength to give the moan, to raise the
shriek, and arouse the system ; there is no
power V) move; the man feels a crushing
danger coming upon hint he can't got out of
the way Journal of licalth.
One Hundred Years Ago
One hundred and ten years aga, there was
not a single white man in Ohio, Kentucky,
Indiana and Illinois. Theo, what is now the
most flourishing part of America was as little
known as the country around the mountains
of the moon. It was not until 1767 that
Boone left his home in North Carolina to
become the first settler of Kentucky. The
first pioneers of Ohio did not settle until
twenty years after this time A hundred
years ago, Canada belo•tged to France, and
the whole population did not exceed a million
and a half of people.• A hundred years ago,
the great Frederick of Prussia was perform
ing those great exploits which have made
him immortal in military annals, and with
his little monarchy was sustaining a single.
handed contest with Russia, Austria; and
France, the three great powers of Europe
combined A hundred years ago, Napoleon
was not born, and Washington was a modest
Virginia colonel, and the great events in
history of the two worlds, in which these
great but dissimilar men took leading parts,
were then scarcely foreshadowed. A hued.
red years ago, the United States worn the
most loyal part of the British empire, and on
the political horizon no speck indicated the
struggle which within a score of years there
after established the great republic of the
world. A hundred years ago, there were
but four newspapers, in America. Steam
engines had not been imagined and railroads
and telegraphs had not entered into the re
motest conception of man. When we come
to look back at it through the vista of history,
we find that to the century passed has been
allotted more important evifots, in their bear.
ing upon the happiness of the world, than
almost any other which has elapsed since the
Creation,
MAY 14, h 869
[Cottespandenee of the VIMAGS REO,OIID j ,
• SNA AND LAND.
FROM NEW YORK. TO SAN FIt.INCISCO.
NUMBER SIX.
Virgin Lianas—why so culled—Drowned
Islands— The Wreckers— Proper name of
St. Thomas—Female Workers—Differ
ent types of beauty—Grecian noses and
Spanish, features—Nakedness and Mod-
esty— Santa Anna—Fruits andilowere.
No.less a man than Christopher Columbus
landed_at_San_Salvador_not_very tar f ona
here and one of these vary Antilles. We
wonder at the success, but as Humboldt says :
'A voyage 'from the coast of Spain to South
America is scarcely attended with any event
which-deserves attention especially when-un
dertaken in summer.' In almost one con
tinuous clu , ter here between two degrees of
latitude, lie the Virgin Islands, so called by
Columbus in honor-of the eleven -thousand
vitg_ins of sainted memory with whom in
nutib — e - F - They seem to vie --- ExtlYin the
to it St. John. Among the group• is one
called Drowned bland, famous or infamous
for wrecks. and where many a gallant seaman
has
_gone to his rest beneath the water.—
When the sea runs high it is almost buried
in foam and the breakers roar can be heard
above the din of the storm. On one side is
a reef, and on the other are several little bays
affording good anchorage for small vessels.
These bays swarmed With buccaneers in the
olden' times. Whoa they were .one, came
gangs of wreckers and subsisted b y t raising a
little stock, and growing some cotton ; hat
JO ir true tirtarlay WI 3 when a verse
struck their rocks and rods.
'Charlotte Amaiia' is the proper name of
the town—that being the Danish designa
'a i, a a I. will Fyoa--h-ow-i-t-eamo
called St. Thomas. To live here with any
comfort one must be incredulous that hurri.
cane or earthquake will ever happen again
—for there is uo sp_ot in the - world has ever
suffered-f-o-ty-from-them—as—this--
_
and St. Thomas was that unbelieving Apos
tle.
The people here seem to have very little
to do or but a very short time to do it in,
for during the whole week I was there, they
were robed in white linen from head to foot,
and either boat sailing or promeoading. The
female negrocs do all the hard—we-fir. ' •
supplied our vessel with coal, carrying large
baskets of a hundred weight on their heads,
the men only lifting their baskets for them.
Whole troors of them are thus at work walk
ing in procession to rho- place-ol— deposit
The poor barefootErgirle, straight as arrows,
and as deliberate as pries.osses in their gait,
were submissively patient and grave. Alas
it is a piteous sight.
The equator seems to be a moral and so
cial equalizer. Every negro in the street
will speak to you if you look at him. No
body is stranger to anybody. You see here
faces the most different from any you ever
saw before. I could not understand it until
1 bad made some inquiries as to their races,
combinations and habits. My surprises were
all among the colored population. You hard
ly see a specimen of the negro with flat tit ss
and thick lips.as we know them. I was told
there was no less than six general classifica•
tions of inhabitants defining more or less
white The Spanish occupancy of the Island
and the neighborhood of Mexico have large
ly distributed Spanish eyes and fine cut fea
tures. The variations are startling. A soft
blue eye, with long black lashes over a pair
of tawney lips carved with Castillien scorn
looks strangely contradictory, and then the
persistence of nature in preserving faultless
teeth and raven hair to the dark hobo, what
ever other variation of feature makes them
all comparatively beautiful. People say we
must go to &therm to see the straight, Gre
cian nose but I tell you, you ern beckon them
to you from every corner of St. Thomas.—
The short upper lip of high descent and the
delicate small oval of the chin are equally
common. And these gifts priceless to prin.
ceases are held here in careless unconscious
ness by fruit girls whose merry eyes never
can alphabet, and whose brown ankles never
knew stocking. Their queenly gait and e
rectness is due from the tact, that every fe
male is trained from childhood to carry bur
dens on her head—from a'tea-cup to a water
pail everything is placed on the small cush•
ion on the top of the head—hence it requires
a nice gait to poise it, and absolute erectness
to balance it where it can best be supported.
Nakedness is certainly to a certain degree
a matter of climate. Modesty makes no note
of anything under six years of age. IVith
the same fitness to the latitude shoes and
stockings are dispensed with, and young
black girls with cairings worth fifty or a hun
dred dollars, garments edged with lace, and
skirts of brilliant colors show at each step
five shining too nails uncovered by morocco.
White feet might not do ho well, not being,
so independent of the dirt—but feet that are
neatly blacked by nature are certainly as
cleanly without leather and much more elas
tic. Two ebony shoulders, unliable to tan,
enjoy the open air by the same philosophy.
A number of Americans live •upon the
island. Otir Consul frequently visited us ac
companied by his frieuds. Among them
were half a dozen ladies from New York who
made themselves quite at home on our decks,
waltzing and dancing with as much freedom
as if upon their own village green. •Wo-were
also paid a visit by that distinguished per
son who a recelved this mestAge at the battle
of Vista-4011 Santa Anna that Gen
eral' Taylor.flever surrenders.'
Of the prodigality of flowers and fruit, no.
language can give you any idea. I stopped
at almost every step to pluck some new leaf,
and admire some new beauty, or some now
fragrance. Everything grows differently
from the vegetation in our elituate. port
onaly enlarges one's world to be surrounded
with an entirely new multitude of trees and
se.oo
flowers. There is the air plant which catch.
es and retains.in the cup_ofits flowet water
to give thirsty man a drink—valuable where
stream or spring is alnioat a rarity. The fo
liage-of the trees is almost 'perpetual, yet
there ore trees which scorn to rest for a
month—dropping thefr leaves and putting
forth no blossoms at that time The cocoa,
the citron. the orange, the bananna whose
youth, frlrshness and beauty know no repose
and no winter, bud, flower and bear fruit, all
in one prodigul ecnfueion of experience
There is a plum native to this island which
dispenses with leaf and. flower, and tip_eas
immediately from the bark of the tree—ma
turity its first stage and last
Should I ri4 being tedious repaid find
much more in my enerienee to write about
but we-cannot always be at Thonias,-Eo
we will trim our sails and steer for more
southern climes. C. F. S.
_ .
__Veasaitt_way of Ele'etioneering
A oisiingui,bed candidate for an of ea of
- 111 - piFfrust a certai, who is 'up to
T-1-VP-0;-41 z < .- r s• I
of live beauty, when about to set off on en
electioneering tour recently, said to hie wife,
who tvei to accompany bin] for prudential
reasnns :
1 11Iy dear, inasmuch as this election is eom
plie9ted, and the canvass will be close, I am
anxious to leave nothing undone that would
promo to my popularity, and so I have thought
it would be a good plan for me to kiss a
number of the handsomest girls in every
place where I may be honored with a public,
reception. Don't you think it would be a
good idea r -
--- ttliqiiiTillriil — flWdevotelsife, 'and
to make your election a sure thiog, - -while
you are kissing 'the handsomest girls, will
kiss an equal' number of the handsomest
e _ t _yrmrtg two l'
The distinguished candidate, wo believe,
has not since referred to this pleasing walla
of popularity.
A autelmourbnce me
lonely highway. As they met, each smiled,
.• • 0
his mistake, remarked with a look of disap
pointment : 'Faith an' I thought it was you,
an' you thought it was me, an' its uaythur
of us.' The Dutchman replied : 'Yaw, dat
is't dhru, I am anuder mall, and you is not
yourself we le both some other podies.'
'Seventy five cents per gal I' exclaimed
Mrs. Partiugton, on looking over the price
current. 'Why bless me, what is the world
coaling to when the gals are valued at seven
ty five cents I' The Old lady pulled of — her
spectacles, throw down the paper and went
into a brown study on want of a proper ap.
preciation of the true value of the female
gender.
An inquisitioe young man visited the
Indiana State Prison, the other day, and
among other questions, asked a girl the cause
of being in such a place. liar answer was,
that she stole a saw mill, and went back
after the pond, and was arrested. The young
man left immediately.
There seems to be four styles of mind :
lit, them who knows its so !
2d, them who knows it aint !
3d, them who split the difference, and
guess at it
4th, them who don't care a darn which way
it isi—Josk
A abort time since, some boys who were
playing hide and seek in a barn at Norridge
wock, Me., discovered a Len's nest contain.
ing 108 trigs, all good and sound. A big lay,
or lie which is it ?
NET PROFIT.-A Chicago doctor has been
fined fifteen dollars for trying to kiss a mar
ried woman, and her husband was mulcted
five dollars for thrashing the doctor. That
made twenty dollars net for the city.
Little three year old Mary was playing
very roughly with the kitten, carrying it by
the tail. Iler mother told her that she would
hurt pussy 'Why, no I won't,' said she;
'l'm carrying it by the handle.'
`Patrick,' said a lady to a slip of Green
Erin who was officiating in the kitchen,
'where is Bridget ?"Indeed, ma'am, she's
fast aslerip,lookin' at the bread bakin'.'
A little gill, worn out by a long sermon,
observing the preacher gathering himself for
another point, exclaimed : .oh, mother, he
is not going to quit at all Ho is swelling
up again r
A married lawiy, in Nashvillo, being askedi
to waltz, gave the following sensible and up.
pyopriate answer : o, thank you; sir, IE
have hugging enough at home
Of the lmndlady who itprinkled snuff upon
her boarder's victuals, it cannot, with nay
degree of propriety, be said that she is not
to be sneezed at.
Our 'Devil' says if the young lady would
sack him without hurting his feelings, let
hsrtgive him the sack she has on—oonteoto
includes.
The youth who cut open the bellows tct
see how the wind got in, is now trying his
baud at fattening greyboundi:,
A Burlington lady has just done the hand—
some thing by her husband and• presented•
him with his twenty first child.
Every plain girl has one consolation. If
she is not a pretty young lady, she will, it
she lives, be a pretty old one.
A rascally bachelor says, orbs friendship
of two women is always a plot against the
tbird.t
NUMBER 45
man on a